by Arlos » Mon Feb 25, 2013 1:02 pm
Like the article notes, the one medical group that ISN'T making a huge profit are frequently the doctors. It's the bigger medical institutions that are.
See, the fallacy that everyone ignores is the claim that health care is a standard capitalist "free market" like any other product. The problem is, it isn't. Not in any way, shape or form.
If you feel like getting a new pair of shoes, you can eventually decide not to get them, or you can shop around to several stores, do research, etc. You can choose to participate or not participate in the market at your discretion. You get cancer, though, and you are a completely involuntary participant. If you want to live, you *HAVE* to buy the products and services, you can't shop around because of constraints on you from your insurance (if you have any), nor can you effectively research prices of products to get a good deal, because with that Chargemaster system, list prices are drawn up with absolutely no relationship to reality or how much that product or service actually costs.
How, in any way, is that a free market system? Also, consider that health insurance is fundamentally different from any other kind of "insurance." Other insurance you buy, car, homeowners, renters, etc. are all bought with the hope that you never actually need to use them. However, we ALL need medical care of some kind or other, so health "insurance" is bought with the express intent of USING it, often frequently. As a result, treating it like other insurance products will get you nowhere.
What we really need to do is to is, I think, the following, assuming we keep something like our current system. (Obviously, I am hugely in favor of just expanding Medicare to cover the entire population, and going with a single-payer system):
1) Put in absolute hard caps on the profits that hospitals, etc. are allowed to take in. They go over that, that money gets refunded to patients.
2) Tie the salary of the administrative staff to the salaries of the doctors, with a hard cap (3x? 5x?) in how far above the lowest paid doctor the highest paid management person can be paid.
3) Allow Medicare to negotiate drug prices, use comparative analysis, and let it pay market rates for durable medical equipment. (see the story for things like crutches and wheelchairs having to be bought at 3-5x actual normal prices)
4) Force all hospitals to abolish the existing chargemaster system, and tie charges for medical procedures to what they actually COST.
5) Enact tort reform to cut down the amount of frivolous malpractice suits, so that doctors don't feel compelled to order multiple unnecessary tests, just because they're panicked about liability. (CT scans, just because someone says the word "head" in the emergency room, etc.)
6) Do SOMETHING about the sky-high prices of so many drugs out there. Either cut how long companies can maintain exclusive manufacture rights, limit profit margins on each unit of drug sold, etc.
I know that there would be outraged screams about the government interfering in business, and let the market decide, etc, but like we already saw, this ISN'T a free market. As such, it absolutely needs different regulations. There is no reason the US should be paying 2x the costs that other western nations are paying for health care, yet getting worse results and having a much larger segment of our population be uninsured.
-Arlos